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Canadian Legion 
Field Day and Sports 


The annual field day and sports 
given by the Canadian Legion will 
be held on the sports ground at the 
Butte on Wednesday June 7th. 

This event has proved extremely 
popular the Jast two years and from 
the program that has been arranged 
nothing will be lacking in making 
the day as entertaining as ang in 
the past. 

The special attraction this year 
will be the outdoor play, “Squatters’’ 
by members of the Legion This 
episode of early frontier days is full 
of action and lots of comedy 

Novelty races, children’s races, 
jumping and a tug-of-war will be 
among the events and a_ softball 
tournament, with a number of teams 
from country points will round out 
a day of real enjoyment. 

The grounds will be open at 11.30 
a.m. and everyone is invited to 
bring their lunches and pienie in the 
grove. Free coffee will be served to 
allat noon. This is a real opportun- 
ity to meet and visit with all your 
friends. 


commence at | 


The sports will 
p m. sharp. 
In the evening a grand dance will 


be given in the Opera House 


—o— 


Bishop SP. Spreng, of Naperville. 
Illinois, who was to have conducted 
two weeks’ services at Zion, Evangel- 
ical Church last summer, but was 
taken sick while enroute so that the 
services were caneelled, will speak 
in the church each evening except 
Saturday commencing Wednesday 
June 14th and continuing until June 
25th Bishop Spreng is one of the 
foremost preachers of America. 


Didsbury Pet Show. 


An exciting few hours were spent 
in Didsbury on Saturday -morning 
Jast, when all the children turned 
out, either hanging fearfully to their 
precious pet or carrying it in their 
arms. 

A pet show was the cause of all 
the excitement, which turned a 
vacant lot into a motley crowd of 
children, parents, cats, dogs, saddie 
ponies and rabbits. It was made 
more colorful and interesting by 
many of the children taking great 
exre in decorating their exhibits and 
themselves for the show. Certainds 
many of the pets had spent some 
time in the bathtub, as they were 
spotlessly clean After a strenuous 
time of judging, dogs of every color, 
breed and age; cats and families of 
cats of every conceivable color: 
boxes of timid little rabbits and 
several decorated ponies, the judges 
came to their most difficult task. 

Their first decision gave Ist prize 
to a Shetland pony exhibited by 
Robeit Jule; 2nd to a white two 
and a half months’ old puppy ex- 
hibited by Stewart Liesemer. 

Great credit is due the judges, 
Messrs ©. R. Ford, W. J. Hillyard 
and J. W Halton in showing such 
discrimination, as each and every 
exhibit was worthy of a place. 

The CG.I.T girls were in charge 
the show and led the procession 
around town before dispersing for 
their homes. 

The large number of onlookers 
showed the keen interest that was 
taken by the people of the town and 
district, and everyone, even the pets 
spent a most enjoyable morning. 


Legion Field Day and Sports at 
the Butte Wednesday June 7th. 


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I No. 6 


DIDSBURY, ALBERTA, THURSDAY JUNE 1 


LOCAL & GENERAL 


Mr and Mra \V 
Sunday in Calgary 


Morton spent 


Mrs. Ranton, who has been ill for 
the past few days is improying 

Mises Betty Linden, of Calgary is 
visiting the Misses Marie and Kdith 
Chambers. 

Mr. and Mre. A. C. 


family drove to Three 


24th 


Fisher and 
Hills on the 


A large number of Didsbury's 
dance fans attended the big dance at 
Carstairs on Friday night. 


Mr. Alvin Hamor, of High River 
was visiting with his cousin, Mrs 
©, I. Marcellus over the weekend 


Mr and Mrs. Erven Rodney were 
visitors in Calgary recently, where 
they attended the wedding of their 
niece, Miss Dorothy Hieland. 


Orrie Jemerson, well-known New 
York Rangers hockey star, whose 
home is at Red Deer, was in town 
Saturday. 


We are sorry to report that Mre. 
August Fisher is in the Calgary 
Holy Cross Hospital undergoing 
treatment for sleeping sickness. 


Ward Keith, Clint Reiber and 
Jim McGhee, with A, W. Axtell as 
guide were fishing over the weekend 
in the Carline district. They say 
they eaught some, but we have not 
seen the evidence, 


Mr. Lyman Deadrick had the 
misfortune to have the first finger on 
his right hand caught while work- 
ing around the tractor. The finger 
has had to be severed at the first 
joint 


A three-act comedy,’ The Dutch 
Detective’? will be produced by the 
Young Peonle’s Society of Zion 
United Church, Calgary, at the 
Opera House on Saturday June 10 
at 9pm. Admission: Adults 25c 
and children Lic. 


The W.C.T.U. will meet at the 
home of Mrs. Lantz on Thursday 
June S8that 38pm. The topic will 
he given by Mrs Gabel. The dele- 
gate to the distriet convention will 
give a report of that meeting. The 
work done in the public schools in 
the recent temperance contest will be 
on display. Members and friends 
cordially invited. 


A rather unique and interesting 
character stopped off in Didsbury 
this week inthe person of Mr. N A 
Guymon, knownas “Banjo Daddy.”’ 
He intends giving entertainments at 
various points in the district. Mr. 
Guymon is 8! years of age and with 
his white hair and beard has thi 
appearance of Santa Claus, in faet 
that capacity in 
vears and has 


he has seted in 


Calgary for several 
appeared at the Stampede on three 
different © 


DIDSBURY MARKETS. 


WHEAT 
AR Ter Nee 4 


aslons 


alae 42 | 
Nahata pad eat plate ttre 10 | 
aol 


No. 2 C.At 


No JOST Yo Caee CIS pee Ea pp oe 1Y 


Will Organize 
Boys’ and Girls’ 
Calf Club Here 


The meeting to organize a boys’ 
and girls’ calf club will be held at 
Didsbury school Monday ey 
June Sth at 8.30. 


ening 


} 


Professor Elliott, principal of the] 


Vermilion School of 
who has charge of the organization 
of clubs in this province will be 
present, 


Agriculture, 


All boys and giris interested, as 
well as their parents should be in 
attendance to hear Professor Elliott 
gi e an outline of the benefits and 
the work of such clubs. 

The Didsbury Agricultural Society 
and U.PF.A. are both behind the 
movement and all members of both 


organizations are asked to attend, 


Westerdale M.D. 
Council Meeting 


At the meeting of the Westerdale 
wunicipal council held Saturday the 
estimates for the year were consider- 
ed, but not finally adopted and aga 
result the mill rate could not be 
established. It was pointed out 
that the municipality had paid the 
school districts in exeess $8,500 00 
more than had been received in the 
school taxes and this condition 
would have an effeet on the munie- 
ipal mill rate 

An application for mothers’ allow- 
ance was dealt with and recommend- 
ed and several relief cases were 
attended to 

It was decided to obtain a number 
of danger signs and place them on 
the roads. 

Routine matters and the passing 


of bills comprised the other business | 


of the meeting. 


-O—————_——— 


Obituary. 


Mrs, AVARD ORDE 
The late Mra. Avard Orde was 
born December 16th [S78 at Annap- 
olis, NS. and Didsbury, 
Alberta on Sunday May 2{st 1033 
In 1901 she was married to Mr 
Avard Orde at Annapolis and lived 
there for a few years They later 


died at 


moved to Massachusetts and came 
west in 1912, settling at Brook 
before coming to Didsbury in the 


fall of 1914 where they have 
ever sipee, She was a member of 
the Chureh of England and took au 
active part with the Women’s 
Miay 

Phere were tw 
union, Mra. H SS, Mann, of Eeckvill 
Alberta and Mrs Wim. Robertson, 


of Coalhurst, Alberta Phe deceased } 


also Jeaves two sisters and two broth- 
ers In eastern Canada she als 


leaves six grandeliid 


BERBER EE BRR E EE 


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+ Builders Hardware Stores. 
“ ‘Where Most People Prefer to Deal’’ 

@ PON 


82.00 per Year. 6 cents a copy 


Local Farmer 
Given Acquittal 


Unanimous verdict of ‘not guilty” 


was returned by a criminal assizes 
jury at ten minutes past one o'clock 
last Thursday afternoon, following a 
tiventy minutes’ deliberation, in the 


case of W. P. Shultz, Didsbury 
farmer charged with theft. 
““T agree absolutely with your 


verdict; you could not honestly 
come to any other conclusion on the 
evidence,” Mr. Justice Tweedie 
commented 

Shultz was alleged to have commit- 
ted theft by retaining and selling 
his 1952 erop, including a one-third 
interest due to R. E. Lantz from 
whom he purchased the farm under 
a share crop agreement. 

Ividence indicated that Shultz 


had made a heavy cash payment on 
the purchase price of the farm and 
had made payments regularly for 
three years despite poor crops. He 
was unable to make a payment in 
1931 because the crop was totally 
destroyed by hail. 

Unable to finanee continued opera- 
tion of the farm due to the ill luck 
of previous years Mr. Shultz sold the 
entire 1952 crop. He undertook to 
satisfy Mr. Lantz’ claim by the sale 
of lumber and gave him an order on 
a sawmill for 25,000-ft. at $23 00 
per 1,000 Lantz took advantage 
of this offer by taking delivery of 
1,000-ft. He did not take the bal- 
ance because, he said, he could get 
lumber for $7.00 to $8.00 per 1,000 
cheaper. 

The evidence on the whole indicat - 
ed that Shultz had endeavored to 
carry out his agreement under the 
most trying circumstances 

C. E. Smith prosecuted and H. 
Lynch-Staunton acted for accused. 
The jury was composed of Alex 
Gray, Jr, Stanley Kitchen, F. W. 
Young, R. C. Wills, Lester Jones 
and C. if, Napper. 

—Calgary Herald. 


1.0.D.E. Notes. 


On Saturday May 20th Mons 


lived | at the home of Mrs. J 


daughters of this] 


HARVEY SPEELMAN, Manager 
[oe ee 8 ee Ee eee se eee 


Chapter held a tag day and thanks 
to the generous support of the publie 
it was suecessful. The Regent an- 
nouneed that this would enable 
lthem to make the desired donation 


,}to the Didsbury Hospital. 


| 
On Empire Day the Chapter met 
W. Phillipson 
land a special Empire Day program 
; Was presented by Mrs, 


| Miss Black and Mr. Ormond Phillip- 
| son 
, WEEKLY SERMONETTE 
| ‘Go ahead and do it—it’s easier 
to sueceed than to explain why you 
dnt 


Be RBBB REBae eee ee 


es for “The Bride.’ 


Solid Wood Rolling Vins 


out the Best of Them, 


eo oe ee ee oe oe oe i ee i 


JHE PIONEER, DIDSBURY, ALTA, 


Greatest Value at All Times 
“Fresh from 


‘SALADA 


TEA 
World Co-operation In Prospect 


the Gardens” 


Events of 


endence of 


the 


the 


past few weeks have concentrated attention on the inter- 


nations of the world, and, by their promise of a general 


a world scale upon the major problems of the hour, have injected 


attack on 


new hope in suffering humanity that at last a serious effort is being made to 
cure the ills which have prostrated the world economic system. Conversations 
leading statesmen at Washington, definite assurance that the world econo- 


erence will be held in London next month, the prospect that solution 


will be found in reciprocal tariff arrangements and adoption of an interna- 
tional monetary unit, have had immediate beneficial effect in the markets of 
the world, and appear to have restored some of the confidence lost in the 


crash of 


1929 and the bitter years since 
Canada, in particular, faces the task 


in 9?) 
4 
1 


if committing its new crop to the 
with a renewed optimism and Assurance from 
reciprocal agreements in the offing that will tend 
to reopen channels of trade long made barren and unproductive by prohibi- 


ertile soil 
vr hi 


yy Asal 


a higher courage 


ngton and Ottawa of 


tive tariff barriers, have produced a most welcome reaction in the Prairic 
We Conjoined with this looms possibility of an easing of the general trade 
ituation in Continental Europe where Canadian wheat has found continually 
creasing obstacles to overcome-—obstacles created by local fears and 
LAr prejudices The movement toward world co-operation bears with 
il the harbinger of ‘h conditions as will make effectively beneficial 


the F|Xmpire trade agreements consummated at Ottawa, last year. With these 


uspicious circumstances encouraging him, no wonder the Prairie Farmer 
ws higher hopes with his seed this year! 
idea that an international problem can only be tackled successfully 


an international 


statesmen. This may to the fact that statesmen are pro- 
rbally hesitant of moy idvance of public opinion -and it is a fact 
i iblic opinion, s le war, nurtured on fears and desperations, has 


toriously nationalistic in ntiment 
the 


the general] abhorrence of wé 


in virtually every civilized coun- 


nations h 


equence ve sparred defensively to evade disarma- 
spite 


the futile hope of 


and have erected tariff barriers 


developing self-contained national economies, despite 
pri 


osities has tended to retard concerted ac- 


yvocative than a concrete fort. 


fact that a customs port may be more 


stimulation of an 


nu the economic problems; but the strangulation of world trade with 
uc npaniment of widespread unemployment and almost universal suf- 
ring, has finally served to awaken general realization of the essential inter- 


of nations, and of the fact that the path to 
Even France, with all her hoards of gold, 
$150,000,000 from England to buttress the 
this day and generation no country is so organ- 


» be able to live of itself 


sure 


ence 


recognition 


y lies through co-operation 
been forced recently to borrow 
demonstrating that in 
das t alone. 
said that the world at last has 
d that is a sign that common-sense is re- 
> would there appear to be a reactionary 
but the movement in Germany 
It may be true that Herr Hitler and his 


Generally therefore, it may he 


speaking 
become internationally-minded; ar 


asserting itself. In Germany alont 


rnovement towards a ‘yr nationalism, 


ig capable of a dual interp 


Nazi army have resurrected some of the more subversive characteristics of 


Prussian ‘junkerism’” in their so-called “bloodless revolution’’; but it 1s 
also true that Herr Hitler has evinced a willingness to negotiate with other 
nations of the world not only tatters of trade and commerce but also in 


The new Germany, therefore, while driven along in- 
With the 


say), 


of armaments 


1n 


rnatters 


lly nationalistic imbued 
of a 
awake to the necessity of co-operation in the wider field of world politics and 


the That is to 


ferna a narrow regimentation by men 


administrative ideals sergeant-major’’ (as Guedalla would is 


trade in interests of world peace and world prosperity say, 


the rigors of the Nazi discipline would appear to be fundamentally protective 
of the German commonweal st the peril within the gates rather that 
Bimed at any imaginary pe: without. In any case, the German inter- 
nal situation does not necessar impair prospects of a successful solution 
of the world economic problem, nor weaken hopes of a restoration of normal 


trade relations among ountries of the world 


—_————— 
! 


Blame the Translator 


Hold Meetings By Telephone 


Post Othice In 


Gives Unique Service 


Sritish Authority Cinderella's London, Enghand, 


Slippers Were Pur and Not 


Says 


dalass that busine men in widely sep- 


trated towns can hold a joint confer- 


ence without the 


travelling 


post office in I 


general 


wondon, Eingland, hag 


Pp \ ‘thou the il at 


Nervous Could Not Sleep 
Tired Out All The Time 


Mrs. George Beribmer, Nauwigewauk, N.B., 
writes I was so very could not 
sleep at night, and felt tired out all the time, 


nervous I 


A neighbor told me about Milburn’s Heart 
and Nerve Pills, and as she was using them at 
the me some to try. [ found 
were doing me so much good I procured 
oxes and they proved of wonderful help 


? 
ne 


time she gave 


two 
to 


For sale at all dreg and peners! some; pat ap ealy by The T Milbere Os, Lad, 


Poros 


Impressed By Visit 


Sritish Viee-Admirnl Gives Account 
Of Trip To Canada 

Vice-Admiral Wade 
field’ gives a breezy account of a six- 
week's visit to Canada in his report 
as president of the 
tired naval officers 

“A small property near Vancouver 
was recently turned over to me, Af 
fairs connected with this property or 
settlement (called ‘Caulfield’ after my 
father, who bought it as virgin forest 
and started to develop it at the end 
of the last century) necessitated a 
trip through Canada to the Pacific 
coast, and so, incidentally, gave me 
the opportunity of meeting A.R.N.O. 
members of whom, in September, 
there were 24 scattered between Nova 


Francis Caul 


association of re- 


Scotia and Alaska. It was a stren- 
uous, but splendid six weeks, The | 
welcome given me everywhere was 


something not to be forgotten, and I 
should like to take this opportunity 
of once again thanking my various 
hosts and hostesses for their charm- 
ing hospitality and the truly delight- 
ful and exttraordinarily interesting 
time they gave me 

“One member (working on a farm 
for his approaching university 
gree) was pitching corn, 
running a ferry, another was perched 
on top of a Eiffel Tower 
‘look-out’ in the forest area 
Ontario, A fourth member owned and 
worked a 20 acre fruit farm. Apples! 
Why the branches were breaking with 


de- 
another was 
of 


sort as 


fire of 


their load, and hardly a tree but car- 


2.000, 


ried some near 
whilst a fourth a ‘J.P’ 
Mountains, and friend 
to the whole of his 
in fact, his word ‘went,’ 


5,000 apples; 


in the Rocky 
and counsellor 
little community 
and little was 
without the 
il of ‘The Com. 


done his district 


in 
knowledge and approy 
mander,’ 

“Everyone who was dependent on 


pension or English be- 


badly hit, the pound sterling hay- 
dropped from $4.86 to $3.80 and 


income Was 
ing 
ing 
‘servants’ were becoming a luxury. I 
to 
comfortable and happy a family can 
be in yuse sans 
fitted labor 
cheap electricity, 


was amazed, however, find how 


aih servants, but 


with saving appliances, 


and a cheerful and 


efficient housewife. 


House Had Gold Ceiling 
Residence Of Bank 
Director Sold By 
house With the 14-carat 
lined 
a house so lux- 


Former Chicago 
Auction 

The famou 
gold-ceilinged 


with morocco leather 


smoking room, 


uriously furnished it would have done 
credit to a fabulously wealthy Indian 


Maharajah -has gone on the auction 
block at Chicago. 

It was the home of Frank A, Mul- 
holland, real estate operator and a 


former director in the chain of twelve 


defunct Bain banks, who was indicted 
with other officials of the financial in- 


stitutions 


The house situated im exclusive 
Beverly Hill was one of the show 
places of the section. 

The building contains eleven room 
and sold along with it were the costly 


furnishings which included a beauti- 
ful hand-carved antique dining room 
suite of French walnut 


walnut, and 


sat 


Fast Northern Trip 


Chestertield 
To Churchill In Seven Days 


Constable Travels Prom 


irom Chesterfield to Churchill, a 
distance of 425 miles, in seven days i 
th accomplishment f Constable 

r Yate Thi is the shortest 
til n record, Constable Yates, ac 
cor inied only 4 an Indian guide 
trave by dog team 

Phe fea f the young onstabl 

is a lished carly in April. The 
tr to Chur only made twice 

eh i! ri] and necessitic 
Constable Yat igs an escort to a 
tern Canadian scientifie explorer 
t month last winter and spent 
that time completely away from civil 
living t life of an KEskimo 
The Paplanation 
Hent here Ou we 
rouchiz bout few little bills for 
my hat tocki and whatnot. Do 
uk I could have married M, T 
Head the lelephone magnate and 
! 1 milli 4 Hut I didn't 

Hent } that explain why 

he's a liona 
\y U 1993 


Plug Tobacco 
smokes slowly in 
the pipe bowl, It 
lasts 's longer 
and cuts the cost 
of smoking. 


Need More Cattle Steamers 


Western Brokers Claim Only Si 
Available For Trade 

Neglect of the Dominion Govern- 
ment to ocean tramps to 
enter the Canadian cattle trade 
strongly resented at Winnipeg. Brok- 
ers point out that only 
steamers are available to this trade, 
' that have 
chartered these boats and that the 


x 


subsidize 


two British companies 
tramp steamer owners some months 
offered to half the 


fitting up the boats to carry cattle if 


Ago pay cost of 


the Dominion Government would pay 


the other half. 

The Dominion Government was si- 
lent on this issue. Today, as a conse- 
quence, the Canadian cattle export 
trade is limited only hy the capacity 
of these steamers to carry cattle. 


They are scheduled to carry 450 each 
every three weeks to Britain al] sum- 
will mean that 

the of 45,100 


mer which a 


mum for be 


exported. 


year will 


Canada could easily export 100,000 
head it is claimed. The cost of tting 
yf cat- 
A boat big enough to 


a boat is about $12 per head 
tle capacity 


LASTS : 


DIXIE 


ONLY 20° A BIG PLUG 


is | 


six tramp | 


maxi- 


LONGER 


| Dominion Drama Festival 


| sass ats 

| Masquers Club Of Winnipeg Awarded 
| First Place 

} The Masquers’ Club of Winnipeg, is 
| Winner of the Dominion drama festl- 
val competition, with their play “The 
| Man Born To Be Hanged,” by Rich- 
ard Hughes. The Winnipeg club re- 
| ceived a marking of 83 per cent, of 
| excellence from Rupert Harvey, fes- 
' tival adjudicator. 


} To the Masquers' 


| will be 


awarded the Bessborough cup, emble- 
of suprem- 
‘anada, as well as the special 
the play in 
presented during the 


Club 


matic amateur dramatic 
acy in ¢ 
trophy best 


given for 


English to he 
festival. 

As the 
| either English or French Mr. Harvey 
nominated Rantzau,” by Erck- 
which L'Union 
Dramatique de Quebec FEnr. Offered 
as their entry. This performance re- 
ceived a marking of 80 per cent. of 
excellence, The Quebec dramatic or- 
ganization will receive the special 
trophy awarded for the best play in 
French, although it that 
took position 


second best presentation in 


mann-Chatrain, 


is notable 


'*Les Rantzau’’ second 


take 500 head would cost $6,000. A in the whole competition. 

boat to carry 400 head would cost The second best English perform- 

$4.800. ance during the competition was 
ate y “Back to Methuselah,’ by George 


Support Land Scheme 


Regina To Participate In Provincial 
Back To the Land Plan 
Decision to participate in the pro- 
vincial government's hack to the land 
Regina city 
council recently, although some critic- 


scheme was reached by 


ism was directed to two points in the 
Protested points were that 
family 
this year than last, and the change 
of policy of the government this year 
compared with that effect last 
year. 


scheme. 


the cost per will be higher 


in 


scheme the muni- 
the plan 
undertake 


Under this year's 


cipality participating in is 


to 
of the expendi 


required to agree to 
one-third 


ture per family up to $400 and, furth- 


contribute 


er, to assume one-third of an excess 


to 


expenditure over $400 but limited 
an additional $200, 

year the cost to the city per 
family was $100 and 
felt those 


year's 


Last 
aldermen 
last 

for 


some 


who went Out under 


plan would have 
objection to 


ng 


ground 


an advantage to 


thi 


given 
under 


those goi year’s plan 


Completes Twelve-Year Task 


Priest- Artist's Paintings Adorn Walls 
Of Gravelbourg Hospital 


Msgr. Chas. Maillard, priest-artist, 
has completed twelve years’ labor in 
painting religious pictures adorning 
the walls of Gravelbourg hospital 

His “Way of the Cross,” just finish 
ed, Consists of fourteen life-size paint 


ings placed around the chureh proper 


They are rich in colours, heautiful 
and of aesthetic value. In addition to 
beautiful contrasts of colors, sym 
metry, order, regularity and balanc 
ing of ideas are found in his work 
They come from the mind of an ar- 
tist, Who has painted the apologetic, 
dogmatic and moral doctrine of the! 
Christian faith 

Coyotes have special places to meet 
And sing thelr weird songs after 


nightfall, but they never use the same 
meeting ground two nights in succes. 
| stoa. 


Bernard Shaw, which the Vancouver 
Little Theatre Association gave, This 
presentation received a marking of 79 
per cent, from Mr, Harvey. Only Part 

tly the first act of this play was 
presented, 

Third 
“Will 

| Dane, by 
Drama League Group B) 

cent, 

[n the French plays, 


of 


in the English 


Shakespeare” 


plays came 
Clemence 

Ottawa 
Its marking 


by 


presented the 


was 77 per 
“Le Baiser 
Dans la Nuit,” presented by Le Cercle 
Dramatique des Etudiants 
Quebec, was awarded 


Leval, 
cond position. 


Ss de 


[ts percentage was 66. This play is 
by Maurice Leval. 

The third 
French 
act), by 


best performance in 
Aftair d'Or” (1st 
Marcel Gerbidon, which Les 
Anciens du Gesu de Montreal present- 
Lt of 


fence, 


was "Une 


ed. gained 63 per cent. excel 


Not So Good 
farmer's 


A 


a lawyer 


m once decided to be 


His father drove him into 


town and got him a job as office boy 


to a law firm, Three days later the 
young fellow was back home again 

“Well, Josh, how do you like the 
law?” his father asked 

Aw, it ain't what it’s cracked up 

oO be, aid the boy, “I'm sorry I 
ever learned it 

Radio telephone ervice between 
trains and ferries has been inaug 
urated by a railway in Germany 

Meteor Crater Arizona, is 4,000 


feet in diameter and 600 feet deep 


ee 


vora of 
meals veret 
ables and fish 


PIONEER, 


DIDSBURY, ALTA, 


Federal Government Economies | 


In Reduction Of Expenditures 


Results In Saving 


Reduction controllable expendi- 
tures over the last three years, cou- 


pled with the $14,000,000 provided in 


in 


the last budget, have resulted in total 


government economies of $81,000,000, | 


Hon, 


ance 


i. N, 
stated 


warded 


Rhodes, 


in a 


fin- 
for- 


minister 
letter 
to all Canadian Chambers of 


of 


circular 


Commerce and Boards of Trade which 
upon the ad- 
to “set a good example,’ 


in matters of economy. 


recently called federal 


ministration 

“The government is in cordial sym- 
pathy with the objects you have in 
mind,’ Mr. He 
pressed the opinion that all factors of 
the n govern- 
ment expenditures, had not been oon- 


Rhodes wrote €x- 


problem, i respect to 
sidered. 

Even if every salary, pension and 
parliamentary 
celled, there would 
of $26,000,000,000 jin 


indemnity can- 
still 


the 


were 
deficit 
non-control- 
lable obligations, he wrote. 


be a 


“Futhermore,” the letter proceeded, 


“may I point out that for two years 


past, through action of the treasury 
board, promot’ons and increases of 
pay have been held in abe and 


the 


positions 


occurred 
the 
have been abolished. These and other 


as vacanices have 


fovernment = service 
restrictions have resulted in a reduc- 
tion in the total charge for salaries 
and wages of $4,500,000 per annum, 
and a reduction of over 4,000 employ- 
ees. This is in addition to the saving 
of $8,300,000 per annum effected by 


the 10 per cent. reduction from all 
Salaries and wages. 
“In calling for economies, it is er- 


roneously assumed that reductions in 


controllable expenditure could be 


made to such an extent as to balance 


the budget without resort to addition- 
al taxation. I submit a in 
round sums which will indicate the 


impossibility of such a suggestion. 
“Pased upon the taxation measures 
in force prior to the last budget, esti- 


mated revenue for the fiscal 
1935-54 
ed expenditure for the coming year is 
$445,600,000, 


the following items of 


year 


is §$2S7,000,000, our estimat- 


in which are included 


uncontrollable 


exenditure: 


$133,000,000. 


Interest 


charges, 


Canadian National Railways defi 
cit, $55,000,000, 
Pensions and soldiers’ care $58,000,- 


Ouu 


Subsidies to pr , o15,000,000 


VING 


Old age pensions, $12,000,000 


Unemployment relief, $35,000,000. 


“These items are fixed and uncon- 
trollable beyond question with the 
possible exception of that for unem 


ployment relief, 


conditions in Cana 


able 
the 


demands which 


upon Dominion t: 


connection, this item 


813,000, 000 


dollar 
expe na fiiy we \ tid till ] ea a 


tur 


ficit of 


every 


$26 000,000 


Building More Active 


are ith $8.191.G00 M tnd 


Of $81,000,000 


Uses Of Wood In Canada 


\ Considerable Proportion Is Still 
Used For Fuel Purposes 

According to figures compiled by 
the Forest Service, Department of the 
Interior, the use of wood for firewood 
still continues to be one of the main 
us the 
per cent. of the wood cut is consumed 
in this The of 
that goes to the sawmill is still great- 
er, by almost one-quarter, constitut- 
ing 38.2 per cent. of the total quanti- 
ty of wood cut, Third in importance 
among the 


of volume of wood used, comes pulp- 


es of wood in Dominion; 380.7 


way. volume wood 


uses of wood, in respect 
wood; 24.2 per cent. of the consump- 
tion of wood goes for this purpose. 
The quantity of wood utilized for rail- 
way ties makes a respectable total; 
hewn ties make up 3.5 per cent. of 


the total consumption of wood, and 


sawn ties per cent.—-a total of 
5.75 per cent. for all tre Fences still 
reqiucre a considerable amount cof 
wood about one and one-half per 
cent. of the aggregate, and poles, pl- 
ing, and similar products form one- 


half of one per cent. 


By 


SVRING IS IN THE AIR! 


It's yf? i ind i ve In 1K i pe 
nt 
il puffed u out it leeve 
1 ene tn buttoned wrapped 
mart 
It lovely 'r th the sprir tir 
i ed or bh and wh print in 
inkly crepr Ik, And you can weal 
t right 1! he the ummer sSenAsol 
It eu tale na 1 cost 
litt 
tyle oh] ( ! 
li at Ls » vert B6 § and 40 
! bu it Li re 1 
\ 1 f 30 h { i 
I e} | ‘ " 
tl nhe\ ‘ i 
‘ ttria ‘ i tl lt | 
Price of pat 20 ce in st 
eter Wo } 


How To Order Patterns 


Adar Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 


175 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg 


Pattern No BN ee 


Name ..cseeee 


Town 


| purposes he said 


Hon. J. R. Cooke, chairman of the 
Ontario Hydro-Electric Power Com 


mission, who has placed his 


resigna- 


tion in the hands of Premier Henry. 
The res'gnation has not been acted 
upon. 
Reclaiming Zuyder Zee 
Work In lietland Wilt Take Twenty- 
Five Years 

The work of 1 timing I W's 

4uyder Gee will prouabiy require 25 


years V, J. P. deBloeq van Kuffeier, 
director of the project, said recently 
while in London. The new Jand will 
ultimately used for agricultural 
It will first be 
used for pastural purposes and later 


be 


at 


turned into crop-growing land 
Approximately 900 persons already 


live on the reclaimed land, and & 


| reproduction 


TENDERS RESIN VTION | Spring Migration Of Birds : 
| From The South Heralding 


Return Of 


Alberta Issues Tourist Book 


Shows Beauty Of 


Famous Holiday Resorts 

Nature” is the 
title of a new booklet of photographic 
of bits of 
Alberta, issued by the publicity com 


and = Grandeur 


“Masterpieces of 


grandeur in 


| missioner of the Alberta Government 
Colin G. Groff, 

There are 15 plates of enk 
|berta in the booklet, bound in an 
attractive cover of black 1 gold 


The 
lakes, 


enchantment of 
beauty of Banff National 
Park and the grandeur of Jasper, 


the 
and 
a few words about the province itself 
The booklet, it 


‘may serve to indicate to those of the 


are shown, states, 


| outside world something of the beau- 


ta's holiday resorts are justly fam 
cus.’ 
The In and gold color scheme 


in bor- 
around the photographs, It 


Alberta King's Printer, 


is curried th ough the booklet 


Gers was 
printed by th 
\s422) 


MeLean. 


Leads In Homicide Rate 


Murder Is Becoming Ingenious Art 


In United States 


“Murder more than eve! 


trade, 


ing an ingenious art, if not 


proximately one-third of the area is in the United States, Dr. Frederick 
under cultivation. Work will be pro-| B. Hoffman, of New York, statis- 
vided for 3,000 persons when the pro- tician, concluded, after a survey of 
ject is completed, Ki tid. 180 American cities. He found the 
The Zuyder heing enclosed United States led the civilized natior 
by a dam about 20 m of the world in the homicide rate for 
the enclosure will be 1932 
parts called polders, from: which the Memph Tenn the ( 
sea will be pump: The main dam al- rate of the 180 cities with 64.24 pe 
ready has been mpleted, and the 100,000 population, but Dr. Hotimar 
first polder probably will be finished pointed out that the high rate n 
next year, be due to admission to Mempt ! 
— - —-—_ —_— pitals of cases from outside the t 
Decrease In Fish Sales A /Beore Of the cles) surveyed, had 
B no homicide in 19382, Tt rate for 
Catch In North Greater, But Price the United Stat was 10.5 per 100 
Lowers Receipts 000. Dr yan compared tt vith 
The value of fresh fish shipped out ;°? ' ind Wale 
of The Pas district during the past ahr ae ‘ 
season Was $33,561, according to thi Expects To Reach Hundred 
report of E, H. Stevenson, fishing in ¥- ; 
spector. Last year the amount rece Seventy-Bight: Year Old Texas Mian 
ed by rm 858.099. The Thrives On Beans 
crease j ttributed to the fact tl Phon J 7 | 
meats and fi of the populatior ‘ H 1 it | P 
tricts are so low in price that nor Pexa liet of be 
ern fi ect to longer f ht Vane t ‘ ( ( eu) 
haul therefore increa ove Nd 
head, { npete it ot \ ! t t r 
ket are I ¢ ) ( i 
The tcl er ul i wa } na ‘ ylane I like t 
greater thar | Give but t car { Biz} t i} 
ceip ‘ | owl! l } t \ r Jariz I t expre 
The total miber ¢ I ( hi} f I Ea) I 
ped this year wa 83,700 N Mi 
920 41 last a her vere 138 
licenses i r tk 1 ] I 
¥s) 92 10 : 
ISTo eb . | 
Bana } | nt vol 
wh rea } ‘ } tl ‘ 
GRAND OLD DUBE REVIEWS BREEESTE SATLONS 
[xa aie SH | PE SE" a aa | 
Our picture shows the Duke of Connaught, Uncle of Kir (jeorge 
apecting detachment of British sail who dis¢ i iat Cans I n 
take pa nh the opening of the Mower lestiyal 


Ww armer 
eo 


Waterton , 


Weather 


Of all the myriad voices with whic 
Spring speaks to mankind none 
more generally beloved or more wide 
ly recognized than the return of 0 
birds. Among our waterfowl the mc 

onspicuous is undoubtedly the Car 
ada goose or “honker ing | 
day and b ght over town we 
Ss country haped flock 
by birds of ripe experience tt ine 
of the ld are strikingly emblematic 
of spring. A few Canada ger Vinte 
in the southern coastal part f tl 


Dominion such as ¢ 


tia and south-western British Colum- 
bia but most of them spend the wit 
ter in some part of the United State: 


There arc 


large wintering grounds 


the coast of the Cars 


Mexico, 


linas, around the 


gulf of and in California 


From these areas the geese begin to 
move northward in February. They 
do not hurry on their way but pause 


at various 
tled 


uitable places in the set 


regions of Canada in March and 
April and await the breaking of the 


bonds of the 


waters along which they 


more 


northerl) 


will nest 


In both Cannida and the Unite 
States these splendid birds, as well 
all other wate vl rforn thei 

pring migration in } e and safet 
from shooting |x f the protec 
tion that is 1 that time ¢ 
the year by a tr ity between the tv 


countrie known as the 
the a 


a joint 


Birds 


Convention, 


in Canada ts respon 


of the Department of 


ere 
i t 
gers to meet } s stor f } 
re { am Lt 
Of cou the Canada geese ar 
no means alone as the feathered } 
binge: Press f 
forward to ] the 
treed tf L retre Ve 
great host of othe I 
fowl, ich as ducks and 
ne birds or insect-eaters of a g 
t © of the earliest 1 
amiliar of the song birds ! 
mont 1 a! ‘ 
1 me le t 
t Othe rly arrival 
’ i , } er W t} \ 
A ( ta re 
i 
v eae ‘ 
| ter 
) 
4 
‘ 
' 
Part Agriculture Pl 
1 < 
; 1 { 
i 1 t 
h in ‘ t k p 


Thureday June 1° 1983 


Bidshury Jliouecr. | 
19038 
ALBERTA 


Thursday. 


Established 
DIDSBURY » 
Published every 
reoetgeeaotl Wates: $2.00 per year, 
41. OO six Months; OU cents extra to Great 
Britain and the Uuited States. Payalli 
nadvanee. | 


Legal, government, and municipal ad 
vertising, 16 cents per line first insertion 
and 12 cents per line (unehanged) each | 
subsequent insertion. Local readers ten 
cents per line 

Classified Advertising: For Sale, Ar 
ticles Wanted, Lost, Stolen, or Strayed, | 


tirstinsertion, (count 


ete , LU cents aline 
eix words to the line), and 5 cents a bine 
Qaeli subse puent insert thet ! 
B ss Cards, special rate of $1 
per lonth i ! |. Ul t yeur il 
paid in ad t 
Not nde ( uw kvent t 
per line firstinsertion iin OU cents 
25 eants each sibsequent ertior 
Card of = Thanka not exceeding six 
lines) OO cents per insertion 
OQoittary poetry 10 cents per line, 


Transient advertisements to be paid 
for when ordered 

Changes of advertisements | 
the oifiee not later , on 
day to ensure isertion in th 
that week 


J. K 


Gooper, Editor & Manager 


Annual Flowers 


Add Brightness and 


Beauty to the Home 


Annual lowers may be plac 
two group hardy and 1 } 


Hardy 


annuals are those 


and bloom where the seed y 
the sweet pea being a good examp! 
Some varieties can be sown alt 
danger of frost is p ¢ duce 
a bountiful crop of b c 
nigella and scabious | f tt 
Halt t s 


group. 
tender that they need to be started 
indoors in flat 


and sturdy plant to set outside after 


danger of frost is over. \ster 

stocks and phlox a of this type. 
It is from th \ that we get 
many of our showiest displays of 


flowers. 


Annuals do not at Tea 
perinanencr It a 
they venerally disappear Ht 
first severe freez set 
meet the needs of 
not care to ¢ t 
morepe 
to mak ] 
beautiful and = livea i i 
quickly, cheaply 
supplying a contis 
and may be effectivels d to ft 
Raps Or ibt 
or perennial border; me varieties 
t¢ vill vy viny 

hey ( ( 
uses Th 
alyss\ | dl 
lobe] | 
erve i 
The ta I 
he! th 
used to t 
ul rat 


DIDSBURY PIONEER, 


What is probably the worl 
farthest north golf course is los 
cated at Chesterfield Inlet on the 


horthern shores of Hudson Bay 
in latitude 67, There are only 
four members and the fee which 
entitles the player to life meniber- 


ship, is ten polar bear teeth 
An increase of over half a mil- 
lion head in the number of ecatth 


on farms is recorded in a re} 
on livestock in Canada for 1952, 


just issued by the Canadian Gov- 


dato Bureau of Statistic 
with §11,100 head, compared 
with 7.801,000 n 1931, 
The eye operation on His Ma 
jesty King Prajadhip 0 i 

the summer of 1951 aur 
United States, h heen so - 
ce ful that there will be no need 
of a further operation, a ng 
to Dr. Vidhivaji, public | h 
director of Bangkok, who ca to 
Vancouver recently aboard ¢ 
dian Pacific Jiner bit pre ot 
Japan, 

A ck 1 in the once pri- 
vate lake the ¢ ni limper- 
ors n he orb len ¢ y 
Peking with a Chinese general as 
host and armed soldiers as id 
was the experience described by) 
the Earl of Ossory on his arrival 


at Vancouver recently in the 
press of Japan from a seycnh- 
month tour of China 


y al fley, east of Lake 
anadian Rockies, 


Paradise 
Louise, in the | 


is the site selected for this year’s 
summer camp of the Alpine Club 
of Canada from July 18° to 3i, 
Some the most spect 

¢ this region 

( y the club 

the unclimbed peak of 

Ini ffel the shade 0 


pitehe d. 


their ca 


mp will be 


Close on 250,00 
ick London 
sh flyer the 
way to the 
Fair, as it passer 1 through 


and Hi 


’ 


real AEN 
ton 


r 


over Cana 


Re-a Lennie’ AG the Oe Baa 
Angus Shops after landins oO 
the fast freighter Beaverda 


heey Scot passed thre 
rn Canada in a_ veritable 
yh. 


crn 


Inaugur 
railway offic 
one of the 
movements in 
country, C. P. Riddell, chair 
Canadian Passenger Associi 
announces that commencing 
month and extending into , 
Canadian railways will establish 
a rate of one cent a mile 
coach travel between points in 
eastern and western Cana nd 


the history ¢ 


return. in all- 
time low i enat 
fares, and sal f 
we | 26 up to 
incl nd ¢ - 
ti }1 up - 
ci 
rhree out .of five 
Memorial Felfo is in transs 
I tion given ann vy ft 
p ad } ite sche )] ) ¥ le | n 
ty have been aw l ( 
dian P fie Railw ( oO 
or sons of ¢ plovec The v 
a total of 80 I the 
fellowship three C. P. R 
award y ¢ S \I { ( 
ter rapher in t} the 
ay | 

Pe 5 ti I kK. § 

er ) pe lent im) 
d t nd 4 
ef Bi Es or t t 


._ B28 S38 Be 2 S'Be 


“a 


oi 


ta 


Ps 


=m9 
me 


Ca 
te 


oe 


i 


Zao oe 


Tn on een ee eT lll 


RANTON’S 


> DAY’ 


DIDSBURY, 


SATURDAY, JUNE 3rd 


ONE DAY ONLY 


Wollar Values that You'll Have to Step Lively to Secure 
ONLY, SATURDAY JUNE 3rd! 


iain si 
2 |) Oil 
bye i 

IZ? 


$1.0 


beethl 
oUF ' 


L pal 
Bedford Cord Riding Breeches | 
Pollen & > i 00 } 
B STS Laer emt Mae) (SNe 
OVS: SOT m wserseys |; 
blue cotton jersc red trim 
SiZeS al), 2 
{it RF oA t 
4 fo Aas } 
nr t 
Boys’ Fane tCn Jerseys i 
in new §| pi ' 
2 tor 51.00 
VEE NS are 
in snappy J eC 
A 1 @Y r 
bes a oa 1.60 
’ Nolet Olio g 
Men’s Dress Shirts 
with separate collars. Mostly 
worth twice the } Ce 
$1.00 Fu | 
ee ee ae on canes eowrenes ame f 
BOYS ORT re | 


, 
) 
Ca 
a 
‘y 
é ; 
aV 4 
‘ 
WA 


' 

4 Bie) 
Lor i ae 
Pants | 


4 
e-~ 


DAY 


ALTA. 


ees 


DRESS VOILES 
| 36-inch dress voiles in neat 
| flowered designs 


$1.00 


BROADCLOTH 
full 36-Inch 


eV as. 


eS 


large and small reich | 
light and dark shades i 


$1.00 


ae eo ee re 


Bie sto 
) RAIS. 


ne ee 


Potter’s Famous | 
English Prints 
t Yds. $4, 00 | 


Le em Re Lee 


t 
> [ay 
; 


Fancy Rayons 
86-Inch 


3Vds. $1.00 


weer © ew aes 


MIS: SES WHITE WHOOPEE PANTS 


red and blue trim 


Women’s 
RAYON UNDIES 


Special Purchase 
PYJAMAS, SLIPS, GOWNS 
NEL BRASSTERE 
SETS 
VEST and BLOOMER SETS 
Dollar Day Special 


T9c 


mena ree 


and 


Cream Marquisette 
36-inch and good quality 


5 Yds $1.00 


es 


Summer Sandals 


in colors 


$1.00 Pair 


Rae aeRO! Nes mR a 


Good Work Shirts 


] 


wer 
VV oy an’ S 
VY Ua 


ue, triple stitched and 
t style, for men 


95c 


a 


SS 
os 


a ek atk ce 


“ME AT RANTON’S 


get a Dollar’s Worth for $1 


BG eo 8 ie. see 


' your choice of any 


Ce a ee ee ne ot it ee 


ot 
re 


eee See ee ee ee a ee 2 oe eee: 


_ 


A Few Girls’ Beach Pyjamas 


style, 3 


$1. oo 


Girls’ 
peach, pink and navy 


4 pair $1.00 


Ladies’ Summer Bloomers 


one-piece to 6 years 


| loomers 


‘Summary 


Comeiietientd 


peach and pink, dium and 


large SIy 


3 pan $1. 00 


me 


Women’s Cotton Hose 
everyday in 


§ pair $1.00 


( ‘hildren’s ( ‘oO’ ton 


good hose sand 


Hlose 


black or sand 


Dollar Day 5 pair $1.00 


eee 


House Binceces $1.00 
new arrivals for our big 
$ Day. Linene and fancy 
prints, snappy styles 


Dollar Day $1.00 


A few Pair 
Women’s 
small sizes 


$1. 00 | 


Dress Shoes 


Women’s Orient Hose 


Dollar Day $2.00 pair 


A 
Women’s Silk Brassieres 


plain and faney styles 


4 tir $1.00 


Men’s Kangaroo Gloves 


roper style, reg, $1.50 


xtra $1.00 pair 


Smee 2S em 


$1.00 


the 


Few 


ee er eee 


beauty] 


Extra 


Men’s 


Caps 
cap in 
store for 


Lo! - Be 


$1.00 


Reno ICTR 
$1.00 


Ss <a fil Hil = § 


°role ae 


A A) A 


nadian Legion Field Day 
VEDNESDAY JUNE 7th 


COE 


Didsbury Lodge No. 18, 1.0.0.F. 


Meets the Ist and 8rd Thursday 
in each month 
Hrothers are weleome 
WOR Hartiey, Sec 


Professional 
OR. W. G. EVANS, M.D. 


Physician, Sutgeon 
Graduate of Toronto University 
Office in New Opera [louse Block 

Residence Phone 50, Office Phone 120 
Didsbury Alberta 


L. CLARKE, M.D., L.M.C.C. 


Graduate of Manitoba University 
ate senior House Surgeon of St 
Michel's Hospital, Newark, Nu 

and Surgeon 


Visiting 
N Cote, NOG 


Physician 
X-Ray in (OSice 
Roval Bank 
Office 63 


UO re 


tes Phene 128 


DR H.C, LIESEMER 


Ss bps 

Dental Surgeon 
radtiate (University of Toronto 
ner Royal Bark 

Phone 63 


Hidabury Alberta 


W. A. AUSTIN 
LAWYER NOTARY PUBLIC 
Commissioner for Oaths 


ESTATES MANAGED 


MARRIAGE LICENSES ISSUED 
Phone 52 Didsbury 


FUNERAL DIRECTORS 


W. S. DURRER 
Fu nl eral Home 


Phone 140. 


Church Announcements 


EVANGELICAL 


Rev HH J. Wood, Pastor 


Welcome to the Evangelical Charch 
Up-to-date in Methods 
Evangelistic in Spirit 
Methodist in Doctrine 

(0:40 a.m. Morning Worship 

11:30 a.m. Sabbath School. 

7:30 p.m. Evening Worship 

Monday 7.30 p.m.: 

League 

Vednesday 

Service. 


Evening, Senior 
Thristian Endeavor. 
Prayer 


Evening, 8 p.m 


UNITED CHURCH 


J. Mitchell, Minister 


A 


wy, 


Sunday School 


service, 


Ll a.m.: 
7.30 p.m, : 
The minister will preach Sunday at 
Westcott at 1! 00am. 


CHURCH OF ENGLAND 


Melvin Notes 
Mrs. Chas. Young is spending a 
few days with Mrs, D, Klinck. 
Miss Mildred Brown, of Airdrie 


spent the weekend at the Johnston 
bome, 


Little Clara Young is spending a 
week with Miss Dorothy Young at} 
Ennerdale, | 


Mr. and Mrs, Ed. Vetter and fam- 
ily, of Three Hills and the Misses | 
Esther and Ethel Rist, of Sunnyslope | 
spent Sunday with the P. G. Johns- 
ton family, 


A delightful affair was held at the | 
home of Mrs. Peter Johnston on 
Friday evening last, the occasion 
being a miscellaneous shower for 
Miss Ethel Krebs, a popular June 
bride-elect of this district. Little 
Clara Young and Jean Johnston 
drew the wagon, beautifully decorat- 
ed and containing many presents for 
the bride and for which she express- 
ed her many thanks, At midnight a 
delicious lunch was served, The 
community wish the bride-elect much 
happiness, 


-—9——_—_—_ —_— 


Mountain View Notes 


_— 


The annual picnic date is set for 
Wednesday July 5th at Community 
Hall. 


A concert is to be held in Com- 
munity Hall on Friday June 9th, the 
program being in the hands of Mr. 
Guymon, commonly called ‘Banjo 
Daddy,” and who is 81 years old. 
Some of the members of the W.I. 
have had the pleasure of witnessing | 
his performance and they think ity 
worth while for friends in both town 
ind country to come to Community | 
Hall on the evening of June Oth. | 
\dults 25c., children 10ce. A dance 
will follow the concert, so be sure} 
to come, Collection for dance. 


| 
| 
| 
\ 


The monthly meeting of the W.I. 
was held Thursday last at Commun-| 
ty Hall, The topic for the day was | 
to have been given by Mrs. J. Wor-| 


vall, who was unavoidably absent, | - 


but the members listened to a most | 
excellent report of the recent W.1. | 
convention by Mrs, Harry Pearson, | 
the delegate trom this local, The 
members were pleased with the 
honorable mention given Mountain | 
View in the handicrafts section. | 
Che date for the annual picnic was | 
set at July Sth, Arrangements will 
be made and committees chosen at 
the June meeting to be held at the 


home of Mrs, Ed. Barnes, Phe 
topic will be given by Mrs. J, Wor- 
vrall. The hostesses for the alter- 
noon were Mrs. B. A. and Mrs. H. 
\tkinson, Members please note 


that the next meeting will be held 
the fourth Thursday of the month 
instead of the usual time. } 


—__—_—-_o —— 


Burnside Notes. 


Mr, Fred Metz spent Sunday with | 
Mr. James Dundas, | 
Mr. Albert Spraggs left Monday 

tor his homestead in Peace River. 


in 


Mr. Leon Doll spent Friday 


Calgary on business, 


Mr. Bob McCulloch left Tuesday 


Rey, A. D Currie | 

June 4 Woly Communion at 11 acm, 
June 18 Evensong at 7.30 pm, 

June 28 Meeting of the Wardens at | 

Crosstield 8.30 pom | 

« | 

. 

M.B.C. CHURCH | 

| 

| 

Rev. V K. Snyder, Pastor 

Sunday Services: | 

1:30 p.m.——Sunday School | 

2:45 p.m.—Preaching Services | 

7: p.m,—Preaching Service, in- 


cluding Young People's meeting every 
alternate Sunday. | 


Wednesday Evenings, 8 o'clock 


Prayer Serviee 


LUTHERAN CHURCH 


Rev. J. J. Kuring, Pastor 
Westeott, Ist Sun, 10.50 a.m German 
= tnd ao English 
8rd i German 
th P80 pom Figlish 
AR 6th 10.30 a.in German 
Didsbury: let Sunday, 2nd, 3rd and 
Sth Sundays at 2.80 p.m, dth Sunday, 


llam 


Is Your Subscription 


Paid Up? 


| Saunders 


i 


to visit his brother Louis at Black- 
falds, Alberta, 

Phere will be a picnic and dance 
fat Lone Pine Hall on June Oth 


INeep the date in mind, 


Messrs. Sam McAllister and Perey 


were Sunday visitors at 


Mr. Noah Eckel’s. 


Lone Pine W.L, will meet on June 
15th instead of the 8th as planned | 
with Mrs. Wim, Lyons, 


Mr. McReynolds, who has been 
spending a vacation with Mr, George 
Metz, left Friday for his home in 
Calgary, 


| 
| 


| 

The new bridgre north of Jutl und | 
is having the approaches fixed up 
and put in shape for travel, the old 
one having been condemned 


rhere will be a concert in Long 
Pine Hall on Saturday evening June | 
3rd 9 o'clock, The 


come from Calgary and are reported 
grood, 
Mi 


Fred Doll, 
helping Mr, Clarence Reinhart with | 
this | 
Oni 

| 


at performers | 


to be extra s 
| 
been | 


who has 


his spring work, arrived in 


district Sunday and will spend 


me with Robert Eckel. 


DIDSBURY PIONEER, DIDSBURY, ALTA. 


hi Sate aha A compl te dh 3 7 5 Country Elevators 
during the time ot ss witheu 

}to ch loss 1 eiuht the so 

FTE teapots catiraclan oot 100 Flour Warehouses 
dition for the sti wus task of 


}grain ration on account of the limit- 


| Counsel ; 


Thursday June f 


Summer Care 
Of Brood Sows 


SOW 


jhe Alberta Pacific (;rain (ompany limited 


with he Board of Grain 


The brood 
machine, the life « 


\ factory otf (Licensed and Bonded 


Commissioners) 


h de pends 


argely on the ca: Large 
quantities of feed issimilated 
during presnancey, particularly 
ofl ad tabitags sls - OPERATING - 
When the sow is ex oa large 


litter, Hence, if the digestive system 


275 Coal Sheds 


raising another larg 

With this in mind 
the breeding herd at 
Experimental Stati 
in 1932 were placed on a good rape 
and oat pasture after litters were 
weaned in late May and early June 
Grain was ted liberally until they 
had regained their normal condition, 
during which time they made very 
little use of the pasture, On June 
27th all grain was discontinued and 


litter of pigs. 
ten sows from 
the Dominion 
nat Scott, Sask. 


Terminal Elevators at Vancouver Capacity 6,000,000 bushels 


Bankers 


Bank of Toronto 
Bank of Montreal 


No, 2 


Royal Bank of Canada 


Canadian Bank of Commerce 


the lot were carefully weighed, After 
Sodays without grain another weigh- 


ing showed the lot to be ©O-||ys, | zziiCRiIiMINIIE IGRI: saan oy espana amegscg ss oe ae Cea ea 


heavier than at June 27th, when SCOTT'S TIRE SHOP, CROSSFIELD. 


grain was discontinued. After this 
_—! 


date (August 21st) the pasture was 
Tires, Batteries, Oils, Greases, Vulcanising 


hot so luxuriant, the weather was 

hot and asa result the weight lost 

to September 27th averaged 34-lbs. 

per head, At this time the Trade in your old tires, will pay freight both ways, 

were placed on a fate oat pasture pies +s ' 
express one way—on vuleanising work or tire sales, 
Will buy 29x440-21's, 30s150-21's and 29x450-20’s, with 
not more than one defective Wholesale and 
retail on all grades of Imperial Oi] and Turner Valley. 


ie 


SOWS 


approaching the shot blade, which 
carried them for 10 days without 
loss or gain in weight, after which 
it was to a light 


spot, 


necessary feed 


ed pasture, 


**Scott Pays the Freight.’’ 


The remainder of the breeding 
sows were bred for fall litters, and 
hence were not comparable with 
this lot, but it is evident that sows 
in medium condition may be main- 
tained for two three months 
}during the idle period without grain, 
providing there 1s an abundance of is 
succulent pasture vatlable. IF ou have Articles 
aaah Nice, y 
Dominion Experimental Sto., 
Scott, Saskatchewan, or Stock for Sale or 


— —._ o—_ --—_—— 


Trade, it will only take 


H. LYNCH--STAUNTON, LL.B. 
Barrister & Solicitor 
DIDSBURY, ALBERTA, 
Mr, 


Goan 
“‘CLASSIFIED AD.’’ 
to Bring Results 


\. Lannan, Barrister 


Alberta. 


Calgary, 


Anything To Trade? 
Try a Classified Ad. 


Crichton-Browre, 
pre-eminent in the British 
Medical World, Declares: 


Sir James 


‘‘Beer----our national beverage 
----is the most truly nourishing 
of alcoholic drinks, and its use in 
moderation is weil calculated to 
decrease susceptibility to fatigue 
and the headaches and despondency 
of those who are over-wrought and 
worried. Beer is not only a readily 
assimilable food, but it promotes 


the assimilation of other foods.” 


M4537 M1830 


DI 


STRIBUTORS 
LIMITED 


\I I | 


‘his 


\ 


THE 


PIONEER 


DIDSBURY, ALTA, 


Win Strathcona Fellowships 


Award To Three Canadians Annou 


ed By Vale University 
Award of five Strathcona fell 
ships for the investigation of tra 

portation problems has been 
hounced by Yale University, three 
the fellowsh}y he awarded 


Canadian 


Children Uprooted Trees 


Trip To West Indies 


ne= Strnmer 


Cruises On Fast Cunard 


Liner Mauretania 


r\WV~ Five summer eruises from New 
n York to the West Indies have just 
an- been announced f the fast Cunard 
Of liner Mauretani: The duration of 
ti wh oecruise will be 12’, day the 


teamer leaving New York on a Sat- 


The recipients are Robert A. Emer- urday and returning Friday two 
son, Morden, Man.; S. Milne Gossage, weeks later, It j msidered this will 
Montreal; Palmer Ff. Savage, Mon- make the cruise: ery suitable fot 
treal; Thomas M. C. Martin, Warsaw, those whose vaeations cover only twe 
Wis.; and Lyell R. Shellenharger, week 
Hopkins, Mir The itinerary these cruises will 

Strathcona fellowships were mad be much the ame that covered by 
possible by the bequest of Lord the “Mauretan essfully this 
Strathcona, identified with the pion 1 winter. The port will inelude 
eer days of railroading in Canada. All Port of Spain, Trinidad, La Guayra 
five successful candidate have had Venezuela, Sout America, Willem- 
previous railroad experience, two of tad, Curacao, n, Panama and 
them being third generation railroad Havana Cuba. 
men Two nights ar day will be 


ingFanama, allowing pa 


engers 


time to cross the Isthmus to the old 
ity of Panama and view the various 
, i F =a fon a Jealous Because They Were Left Out) Jocks on the wav. The sami period 
h hil 4 Lm? § eserva ion « * 
ae Of Arbor Day Ceremony will be spent al in Havana. with 
re 1 t f the private bank- ‘ : an U 
Jealous children who were not that “oO P o bas) Ha)? enif ann 
ho Knowles a sane . bathing, racing, ketball, golf and 
1” cnosen assist in an Arbor Day jai alai to attract the visitor. 
of Prin t [rome I ae ety p - Pe ne ay 
re ‘ . ee ceremony LOOK tnel reveng AL Practically a fil! daylight day Will 
cores ( n : } . ' we oe ¥ be 
Ladysmith, South Africa, The town pe spent ashore 1 of the other 
» y ) Id wi tie Arte 
Pex € ipe old age in Vic- fathers and le ading citizens assem- ports 
toria. Out of 245 persons buried in ; pron A , Saag ean ; 
# : I } “* bled on the sports ground and enter- Cruise sailing dates are July Sth, 
a ( tery Jas 1a {Hoya \ 
ve Be netery fast year there tained a number of school children July 22nd, August 5th, August 22nd, 
were 50 more than 80 year age WAR: AEE ree i P 
. ! ; ) Inet har t ete “A oe: Lectures on trecs were delivered and and Septernber ath. 
Nearly ) per ¢ had reached 70. af he : hmaki } vildr 
mat : ; : after the speechmaking the children Commenting on this unusual cruise 
y + mosed to the wi } ' 1 wha} aA witt ai an joe 
Gert posed to the world were entertained with music and x programme, Arthur Randles, general 
lisarr y r ren hat the B chr nie ‘Whe Wav 47 MA TIcg 5 
disa rence that the Bri- freshment The mayor and magis- passenger manager of the Cunard and 
in } amended to proy ide trates then each planted a tree, as- Anchor-Donaldso: Lines in Canada 
e of 105 millimetres sisted by certain children. Next morn- cajq “ye have had iny inquiries 
for m runs nd to aboli all ing the trees were found uprooted 41; vear for summer cruis¢ the 
. le « oi Su f phlias ’ 
an} and stripped ein ronage West Indies that we have decided to 
FE \ ver Da RTS i schedule a prog: e which a fey 
Pre ‘ the Car aa Pp years ago would have been impra 
} 7 ijt } +} ' ¢ ¢ 
cced aivectos {| Winnipeg Newspaper Union| ticable, Apparently thousands of peo- 
Put ple who cannot get away in the win- 
er t the ot ‘ ter are anxious t sit the places in 
$7 ! n New York the West Indies which they have read 
I } numbe of and heard ch abe but 
i f t which up to now ! e not ber 1CCE 
ea titut at sible in the manner arranged for win- 
the t nec t ter vacationists, that 1 by cruises 
f ok in large Atlantic liners on the 
c inclusive expense } Because f 
| e ha the tremendous number of t 
; thar received at our offices we de Dy) 
ele it Pe look into the question of limate 
£ I Government thorough! We obviously did not 
t} 1 ; r want to send pleasure cruises to th 
} ' We Indie n summer if the i 
} iny doubt a t vhethe vel ( 
ze tinte ple i i! i 
; P : eather 
To t ‘ ve | ained I i 
Frank “ ye} rey 
the ent rat i Vi 
niet Maurets 
touch nte We £ it 
he ' re t ete 
: \ i ; ha 
P repre i { n 
; veel } 
I 
13) Y 
tant trace 
t 
} xper 
| 
Kn | 
r i 
\ 
‘ 
‘é Y ! ' 
1} ! i ! ‘ 
| f 
I 
eae 
GOOD LOOK TNE SPRING WEAR 
K ‘ Aircraft In Demiuind 
| 
i 
f 
How To Order Patterns WORLD? THAT'S LIVE 
— 
® 
, : 
I pj Wake up your Liver Bile 
ul t Ave. W \ 
hi y bee No Calomel necessary 
sae ————————————— aa Ais pe fee! « sluggis 
Patte HizZe a ’ ake the P) ' king 
ahiie wale ws . ' 
chewing ¢ r giage w ' 
Name the wen & goore ¢ er 
. 2 What s wake Ct] 
‘ anted Inventions aemé bile er 5 ‘ ® we 
f ation Be Free Om Request ‘ ‘ e " ¢ et 
y r eetines » 
Tie RAMSAY Co. &cpt 273 BANK sr 5 i tien king we ley 
' ' ‘67 OTTAWA, Ont Town ere ‘ er Pille w ’ fix r) 
- =~ t ¢ eqe'able ale « ‘ 
j A ' veme Heliae sube ‘ 
8g 2 ate ule 4: 


Indian Handicraft 


Medium Of Artistie 

Native Canadians Receiving 
Attention 

times 


Expression 


In 


handicraft, 


of 


leisure 


the 
as an occupier of 


these when value 


medium of artistic 


its 


and a expression, 


is receiving due Miss 


Mabel C 


attention, 


Ringland’s article in the 
April “Canadian Geographical Jour- 
nal,’ on Indian handicrafts, is of pet 
tinent interest. The red-skinned 


Who are 


to 


country are noted for their manufac. 


peoples indigenous this 


ture of articles of real beauty; many 


of them, in fact, such as ceremonial 


decorated with 
and enduring 


belts and armlets, 
of 
nificance, 

Miss tells 


among the Ojibwas 


are 


designs historic sig 


of handicraft 
and the Algomas, 
following their arts from the simplest 
forms to 
sophisticated 


Ringland 


of earliest times the more 


complex and 


expres 


sions of today. Fifty years ago 
the 
sign Was @ characteristic combination 
the wild 


with lines and angular figures, 


nm 


Ojibwa bead-work, principal cde- 


conventional rose and 
buds 


This design is very prevalent among 


the handiwork of Northern Manitoba 
Crees, who use it on moccasin vamps, 
on the gauntlets of gloves, and in 
panel decorations on skin coats. It is 
extremely effective, with its many 
Variations and skilful color blend 


Silk and beads are the mediums. 


Miss Ringland divides the designs 


of the Ojibwas, which she discusses 


Into four more or Jess 


Inbolic value: simple basic forms, 
geometric designs, floral patterns, and 
realistic picture figures. The article is 
ntertaining and informative it 
would be of interest to know how 


much of the Indian technique and 


decorative scheme in handicraft could 


be applied to such things as quilting, 
lug-making, tapestry and similar 
items o handicraft practised by 
White people. The Ojibwas, one notes, 
have adopted the hooked rug as a 
medium for realistic artistic expres 


sion._-Winnipeg Free Press, 


Quebec Town Lowers Taxes 


Rigid Economy Has Provided Man- 
freal Suburb With Surplus 
Among the Quebec municipalitit 
that have maintained balanced bud 
gets through the difficult years of the 
current economic depression is the 

n ¢ Mount Royal, a suburb of 
M re Mayor T. S. Darling of tha 
r | is 1 0 ip mn 
t t 1 tia Li 1] need ] 1d 
a la 
ti ! 1 e 
Ri nue f ed 
> S358 “4 ys pen 
$98 99 uM sur 
I t tax rate reduction have 
! po le, Mayor Darling 
1, throug) t 2 the toy ( 
liture non-essential ind 
} ir ( ts | ! 
I \ ; { \ { 
Fi \ ted 1c} P oO 
\ ( 1) i ha 
iti f 21 


Book Only Inch Square 


Contains One Hundred Pages 


By Great 


Written 


Astronomer 


14 } i} } 
Pte i thi t ra ! 


Will Visit Grain Show 


land 


Of 


And Ogden’s Fine Cut 
Cigarette Tobacco is one 
of the things that make 


life worth while. 


Easy toroll? Yes... but 
there's more than that to 
be said for this fragrant, 
mellow cigarette tobacco. 


It's cool and smooth— 
gives a man everything 


he wants in a cigarette. 


Get a package and learn 
the whole enjoyable ‘‘roll 


your own’ story that 
Ogdens wants to tell you. 
Use ‘‘Chantecler”’ papers 


with it. 


OGDEN’S 


FINE 


CUT 


Your pipe knows Ogden's Cut Plug 


Undertaking 


Winnipeg 


Di 


Holding Garden Contest 


Being Sponsored = dn 
Women’s Canadian 
Club 


to develop a 


By 


pir 


he)} ind Ny eed to the compet 
tor a garden contest for the unen 
ployed Winnipeg will be tage 
th ummer by the Winni] \W 
Ine ( nadian Club. The t\ adi 
idl nt 12 n for the ‘ 
‘ l rr te $2 } 
a tar receive 1 { 
har cl mittec e cd 
nin ( ‘ Will also be ¢ I 
to save th rden: product 
| ded ef ‘ 
] 
! tre ! ! 
i} ! 
er thi ! mh 
i 1 ( 
tre 
dit 
‘ 
‘ { t 
, | he 
Moy 
| 
her 1 


THE 5 


HOUSEHOLD 


. OINTMENT 


~ 


JHE PIONEER, DIDSBURY, ‘ALTA. 


Krow to get to 


SLEEP 


When you can’t sleep, it’s because 
your nerves won't let you. Don’t 
wasle time “counting sheep.’’ Don’t 
lose half your needed rést in reading, 
Take two tablets of Aspirin, drink a 
glass of water—and go to sleep. 


This simple remedy is all that’s 
needed to insure a night's rest. It's 
all you need to relieve a headache 
during the day—or to dispose of 
other pains. Get these Aspirin tablets 
and you will get immediate relief, 

Aspirin dissolves immediately— 
gets to work without delay. This de- 
sirable speed is not dangerous; it 
does not depress the heart. Just be 
sure you get Aspirin tablets, 


ASPIRIN 


Trade-mark Reg. 


VIS SSISS Sa 


HEART 


OF THE 


NORTH 


By 


WHELLIAN 
BYRON 
MOWERY 


(WNU Service) 


Copyright by William Byren Mewesy 


Sa 


CHAPTER. X,~ Continued. 


For a moment, groping about to re- 
3uzzard hardly 
knew what to say or do. There had 
mistake; he had that 
incident with his own eyes when he 
glanced through the window to tind 
He debated whether 
from his statement o1 


trieve his blunder, 


been no seen 


Where Alan was 
back 
to plunge ahead and tell the rest of 
it battle, the 
whole body 


to draw 


Joyce's 
that 
When she put the 


momentary 


shudder swept her 
scarf into the stove, 


and the quick blinding tears that she 


dashed away 

He thought; “Better not get any 
deeper into this I'd only blunder 
again, Better back out entirely,” 


He stammered: "I might have made 


a mistake. I might -uh- it might 
I just 


something 


have been the wrapping paper, 


merely saw her put-— uh 


into I jumped to conclusions 
the Why 
would any person want to burn up a 
gift like that? Let's forget it.” 

His tones carried no conviction, He 
realized it himself Alan disbelieved 
Alan knew Joyce had burned the 


and 


‘ 


Must have been wrapper 


hm 


cart he he. 


rave 
Rave 


Cursing himself hotly, Buzzard 
ked 
Hie had 
had dealt 
After a 
him 
You'd 


Walling tor Us 


out across the purpling river 


meant the best, and he 
Alan 


little 


only 


a savage pitiless blow 


time Alan said to 


better go up, Buzzard he 
may be 

Aren't you going?” 
now; - don't 


uch care 


not 


I don't want 


“NOW I FEEL 
FULL OF PEP” 


After taking Lydia FE. Pink- 
ham’s Vegetable Compound 


upper, 


That's what hundreds of women 
cay. [t steadies the nerves . .. makes 
sou eat better... sleep better... 
relieves periodic headache and 
bachuche..,. makes trying days 
eadurable. 

If you ave not as well as you 
vant to be, give this medicine a 
chance to help you. Get a bottle 
from, your druppist today. 


— ee 


W. WN U eS 


| zard not to urge him, 


Something in his voice warned Buz- 
As he turned 
sald, in the tones of a 


away, Alan 


man who has made some hard and 


abiding decision; 
“When you've had 
back down here; 


supper, come 


that work; we'll do it now, so we can 


Ret away early. I was thinking-— for 
this evening——something else. But 


that's out now, ... ."' 

At three o'clock the next morning 
Buzzard lifted the ‘plane out of the 
sig Alooska, With Alan directing 
him, he headed due north, 

One hundred and thirty miles away, 
hearly four hundred miles from Fort 
IEindurance, a small tribe of Tinnehs 
lived along the western fringe of the 
Thal-Azzah. They were a_ timid, 
skulking, inoffensive band, shouldered 
into a where other tribes 
Dave MacMillan had 
been their friend and they brought 
him their furs; and Alan, during his 
years at Endurance, had sent a pro- 
tective patrol to them twice a year. 

Joyce had found out where they 
were spending this summer; and Alan 


region 


scorned to live. 


had a mission with their old head- 
man, Mugwa-Etthen, 
When the timber country began 


yielding to lakes and semi-muskeg, he 
got out and started 
searching ahead for their camp. At a 
height of five thousand feet he could 
region of than two 
hundred thousand acres, The eyes of 
an eagle, the wings of a bullet-swift 
curlew, and that big-barreled Brown- 
ing machine gun —through luck and 
driving purpose and a faith in his du- 
bious plan, he had smashed through 


his glasses 


sweep a more 


obstacles till now he held the power 
and heavy odds over those bandits. 
The sure knowledge of this was 
about all that left to him. His 
work in the Mounted, his life here in 
the North, 
zard's 


Was 


were both gone; and Buz- 
last 
ning had showed him that his secret 


cataclysmic words eve- 
hope toward Joyce had been a fool's 
hope, a fool's wistful thinking. 

How low he must have fallen in her 
estimation, that she should burn his 
gift to her! At first it had seemed 
a little cruel of Joyce to do that. But 
then he looked at the incident with 
relentless honesty, and he could not 
blame her. Once he and she had plan- 
ned to marry. People had spoken of 


it; it had been generally accepted 
along the River. She had liked him, 
loved him. What must her feelings 
have been as she watched his rela- 


tions with Elizabeth, and saw him en- 
gaged to another girl and coming no 
more to the Big Alooska? She must 
have felt shame, a burning shame, at 


being jilted. Month after lonely 
month of that —it had been an out- 
rage to her girlhood, Nothing she 


could do to him could be so heartless 
as what he had done to her 

Through 
last sighted the Indian camp, a clus- 
ter of leather 
lake where the band was passing the 
their fish 
zard roared over the camp and bank- 
Old Mugwa-Etthen, a 
wrinkled old 
bade 


the propeiler disk he at 


brown tents beside a 


summer near weirs. Buz- 


ed to alight. 
gnarled and 
stalked up 
welcome. 
After this 
Alan were a 
areas in the watery wilderness of the 
party of 
He himself 


savage, 


and gravely then 
flood 


knew 


season of heavy 


rains, there few 


Thal-Azzah where a men 
could 
hazy idea where those areas lay; but 


old 


camp had only a 


this headman, Mugwa-Etthen, 


Who-Follows-the-Caribou, had lived 
his life along the border of that great 
marsh and knew it better than any 
man alive, and could probably give 
him a pretty definite idea where to 
look 

Very wisely, Joyee had kept from 
letting the nomad bands know any 
thing about the police defeat The 
Shagalasha maintained order in go 


huge a territory largely through their 
the 
would 


had not 


reputation of never failing, and 
stinging 


harm 


news of their defeat 


do incaleulable Joyce 
even told old Mi 
After 


in guttural Tinneh 


wWwa-htthen 


pledging the headman t« 
Alan 
story of the 
battle. As he told of the 
escaping u the Alooska, he 
that the old chief 
all interested 
Alan looked at 
up,” he thought 


lence, beg 


ketehing the 


robbery 
and bandits 
noticed 


uddenly became 


him keenly Some 


thing's "I've stum 
demanded 
three breaths 
Why 


Drawing a crude map of the Thal 


bled onto something lle 
When I 
you start like hit 


wa-wa two 


ago buck 


| Awaah with his bony forefinger, the 


5" 


HAS LOST FAT FOR 
THREE YEARS 


I'll help you with 68 Ibs. Gone Altogether 


A woman writes: ‘For nearly, 
three years IT have been taking 
Kruschen Salts every morning in 


hot water, and have lost 68 Ibs. of 
fat, My weight before tiking them 


, was 196 lbs, and it Is now i28 Ibs. | 
Campare the differenc: it is mar- 
vellous. My mother «and sister are 


also taking Kruschen and lots of our 
friends, and think they are wonderful. 
As regards diet, it is not necessary to 


do one little bit of dieting; in my 
case I have never denied myself! 
anything since I started taking 
Kruschen Salts. I walk every day, 


and do not eat many potatoes or much 
sugar. I don't think [ shall ever be 
grateful enough to Kruschen Salts for 
the great help they have been to me, 
and shall never stop taking them, or 
recommending them to people I think 
need them.'’—(Miss) K. T. 


Taken every morning, Kruschen 


effects a perfectly natural clearance of | 


undigested food substances and all 
excessive watery waste matter. Un- 
less this wastage is regularly expelled, 
Nature will eventually store it up out 
of the way in the form of ugly fat. 

renee 


old headman 
news. 
Ten suns ago, he : 


sprang his astounding 
tid, Tukeok and 
another young buck had gone west- 
ward into the Land of Many Waters 
to locate rat colonies for autumn 
trapping. One evening they heard the 
boom-boom of 
southwest. 


fire-sticks far away 
Slipping up, timid, cau- 
they saw men 
shooting wavies for food. They saw 
a tent, a camp on an island. 

For several minutes, fighting down 
a wild elation, Alan forced himself to 
crouch there, asking questions, fixing 
that map and that spot 
in his 


tious, some strange 


unforgettably 
mind. 
At the wigwams he rejoined Bill. 

“Come on! Let’s be getting into the 
air! An hour halt from now 
we'll be saying it with a machine gun. 
When we flew up here we brought our 
luck along!” 

From his height of three thousand 
feet, reading the country spread be- 
low him, Alan could follow the crude 
finger without 
That should be the great 
blue-water lake which Mugwa-Etthen 
had deseribed. It 
in the center of it. On the 
the edge of the 
cluster the bandits should be camped, 


and a 


map once being in 


doubt. 
should have islands 
one of 
north 


islands near 


if they had not moved on 


“Swing north!’ he shouted at Buz- 
zard. “Those islets there to them- 
Selves. Af 

The machine swerved and thun- 
dered closer, One by one Alan started 
to search ihe five. On the first one, 
nothing. 1 the second, nothing. But 


on the third He started sud- 
denly as he caught that center one in 
clear focus. Below them on that 
ter island, conspicuous to thelr sky 
patrol. stood white 
tent, 

- After a 


cen- 
a solitary dirty 


had 
leaned 


few moments Alan 
presence of mind again. He 
forward and shouted instruction; 

“Drop down to a thousand feet. Fly 
that Want 


to study it carefully before we start 


ovel island again. slow 
thingss.”’ 


Buzzard dropped down, 


wung 
around. As the ‘plane sailed over a 
second time, Alan drew the island up 


to him studying the tent sharply, he 


saw a movement of the flap-front 
and distinguished a man’s face, up- 
turned, peering at them 

One bandit there at least! But the 
others ? 

A guess shot into his mind; those 


others had probably gone hunting for 
at the foule 


there be 


caribou over east 
As though that 
it’ this 


watcher 


MmINnoUus Cll 


cling meant and had becor panicky 


, 
a puff of white, a single puff, burst 


from the flap-front Confident the 
man was alone and the others were 
gone, Alan decided to take this ban 
dit) alive He needed information 


DOCTORING YOUR 
DAIRY HERD 


Cows aren't machines, They can 
get sick or hurt. But Minard’s 
lLiniment makes it easy to care for 
their ills. Mrs, Thos, Bulmer of 
lardo, B.C,, found one of her herd 
with a lump in her udder, “I 
rubbed it with Minard’s Liniment”, 
She says, “and it soon got better.’ 


Minard’s is best for Cuts, Bruises, 
Colic, Distemper, ete., and equally 
good in stable or in house, Well 
named “King of Pain”, rT) 


about the others, and = information 
about that pack of furs to clear Dave 
MacMillan 

While Buzzard circled at a 
tance, he page 


book and printed a message 


safe dis- 
tore a from a 
“If you shoot again, we'll splatter 
you and that island into the lake with 
our guns, Stand out in the 
clear. No weapons on you, Don't try 
any crooked move after we light.” 


machine 


! 


nemo | 


He wrapped the message around a 


monkey-wrench and handed it to Buz- 


zard, From wartime practice of drop- 


ping ‘eggs’ on ammunition dumps 
and second-trench Flammenwerfer 
and camouflaged batteries Of Krupp | 
79's east of Verdun, with no aerial 


sights except two nails and a string 


along the fuselage, Buzzard was a 


good judge of speed, altitude and the) 


right split-instant to release. Whirl- 
ing over the island, a few hundred 


yards up, he planted the missile with- 
in a dozen paces of the flap-front. 
As they looked back they saw the 
man run out to it, read the message, 
hesitate a moment, and then raise his 
left arm, waving something white 
A pistol-shot off the island the 
‘plane lighted. Buzzard stayed in 
the machine, Alan and Bill got out 
the canvas canoe, slipped automatics 
into their pockets, took rifles prom- 
inently in hand and went ashore 
While Bill searched the bandit for 
a hidden revolver, Alan looked at him 
curiously, He was a strange charac- 
ter to find country, Slant- 
eyed, his Olive, he looked as 
though he had blood in his 
veins, The rag he had waved in token 
His right 
arm dangled limp at his side 
Alan demanded, “Are you the 
low we hit in that fight?” 
“Chink” Woolley nodded. 
“Are those other men 
Alan asked, “‘or 
Woolley batted his eyes slowly, as 
thought “EHuntin’, 


in this 
skin 
oriental 
Was 


of surrender a sling 


fel- 


out hunt- 


ing?” where ?”’ 
though taking 
yes," he managed. 
“Which way?” 
“North'east.” 
(To Be Continued | 


THE RHYMING 
OPTIMIST 
Aline 


YOU HAVE COME BACK 
You have come back; the garden 
ways 


Are bright as in those other days 

When violet 

And mignonette 

And larkspur flowered to win your 
praise 

You have c back; the old house 
glows 

Again as gracious as a rose 

Through every room 

Like rare perfume 

The magic of your presence flows 


me 


You have back, and O, my 
dear, 

The wonder of your being here 

Brings back anew 

Old dreams we knew 

And love we lost in yesteryear! 


Cause Of Ruicid es 


come 


Masculine Vanity Said To Be At the 
Bottom Of » Large Percentage 
A study of suicides in the United 
as disclosed in cold insurance 
company statistics led Dr, William 
Muhlberg to conclude that masculine 


States 


vanity was at the bottom of a large 


percentage of these tragedies in the 


last three years. 


"The thing that drives men to take 
their own lives, it seems,” he said 
is their inability to swallow the pride 
they have enjoyed building durin 
their prosperous year It is not 
haunting fear of seeing ! ! el 
go h or} wife weaken und 
the monotony of housework yimuch 
a t tis the agony ot ilizing hi 

iphbot glee whe I L2-eylind 

uper-sedan i, and th mil 

\k \ from the ¢ nt } 


Priendship Tours Organized 


Friendship Tours rganized ove 

\ will bring parties of British wi 
nen to Canada 1 States to 
ittemd tt Congress of 
Women and tt Ba wt Ch 
cago in July 1 rding to word re 


ceived at the Canadian National Rail 


Was Passenger Department, Mon 
treal Information indicates that 
about 200 British women will the 


tours 


state 


{| committee 


Rheumatism 

fe caused by failure of kidneys te 
remove uric acid poisons from the 
blood. Gin Pills relieve by neutral- 
izing this acid and restoring the 


kidneys to normal action-— 50c @ 
box at all druggists. 


lor, 

4m tay, 
4a4naandr® 

j 


i oo 
CEOS AEST peMt G 
Aas 

*T AND (1, AOD 


| Little Helps For This Week | 


“This God is our God forever and 
ever; He will be our guide even unte 
death.'’-- Psalm 48:14 


Be still my soul; thy God doth under 


take 

To guide the future as He has the 
past; 

Thy hope, thy confidence let nothing 
shake, 


All now mysterious shall be bright at 


last J. Borthwick 
He has kept and folded us from 
ten thousand ills when we did not 


know it. In the midst of our security 


we should have perished every hour 
but that He sheltered us “from the 
terror by night and the arrow that 
flieth by day” -from the powers of 
evil that walk in darkness, from 
snares of our own evil will, He has 
kept us even from ourselves and 


saved us from our own undoing. Let 
of His hand in all 
the the 
changes and chances of this troubled 
It is He that folds ~nd feeds us, 
that and out,--to 
be faint or find pasture, to lie 
by the still waters, or to walk by the 
and desert EH 


us read the traces 


our ways, in all events, 


makes us to go in 


down 


Way that is parched 
E. Manning 


Age Of Technocracy 


Machine Power Shown To Be Much 
Cheaper Thun Man Power 
The Montreal aldermanic relief 


has set out to determine 
just what are the differences between 
man-power and machine-power im la 
bor, and here are some of the results 

1, One mechanical 


and operator equals 52 men, 


truck loader 


2, Loader fills a truck in five min 
utes; the gang requires from 40 to 60 
minutes 

3. Cost per truck Loader, 60 
cents; gang, $20.40 

4, Cost per truck; Loader, 12 
cents; gang, between $2 and $4. 

These preliminary data will be 


checked in a more extended experi- 


ment on a pipe-laying job next. The 
test grew out of the demand that la- 
bor-saving machines be done away 
With and unemployed laborers substi+ 
tuted 


Reciprocal Trade Agreement 


Pari Concessions Between Great 


Britain and Germany Over 
Limited Field 
Reciprocal trade and tariff conce 
between and Great 


sions Germany 


Britain were announced recently. The 


quota for British coal exports lo Get 
many has been nearly doubled and in 
return the United Kingdom make 
tariff concessions over a limited field 


rhe announcement of arrangements 


of increased trade with Ciermany fol 


earlier t 


trade agre 


Which Greut Britain 


ket in Denmark for her 


pp luct ill be greatly creased in 
return nereased quotas grant 
to Danish dai ind ag al pr 

| ts 


of white or coloured 
ovel hg 


25 feet 
paper for kilchen use 
shelves, liming drawers, etc. 


ord parea.pegeucts 


Thoreday June) 1983 


UHDANA NAOMI NT N/A)0 NAMPA HAN AHR NANARMN ANNONA MMMM Ma 


Shingles... . 
Car of NEW 
NOt WAN, NO 


Shingles 


thd hg 
Thick Butt 


SHINGLES JUST 
2XXX, and No. 2 


Posts .... 


We have a good assortment of Tamaracs from 2-In. to 
6-In. Tops. After the rain these are easy to set and the 
smaller ones will drive in, 


Screens for Doors and Windows 

New in. Four different styles in screen doors— 
them, Have your verandah sereened in this year, 
can make up screens for any style or any size of 


; 
| 
| 
| 


stock 


see 
We 
verandah. 


a Lumber Co., Ltd. 


Re _ A. WALLACE, Mer. Phone 125 : 
UTA LT ch 8) AP) PTA ARATA TIRE 


PUPP RONAN PePPRLRPPePe 


je he it A RAIN O NewS 
ic 
fe 


Quality First! 


ER RNS 


Our Moats are Carefully Chosen and we always 
Insist Gn best in (Quality. 
We Carmyiaie Full Line of Cooked and Cured 
Meat. 
FRESH FISH EVERY FRIDAY. 


WE BUY HIDES 


Re a ee NTT 


Didsbury Meat Market 


Qo 
4 


Phone 12 


TI HIN Yee viele. Merely eoies (ese ley cde) eles fed Iie fe 


J. Kirby, Manager 


SMI YUMMY YUMA VOY alo aa eae ed refed 


2 


Nese fe fel fo) fe 


mmr 
jyAwoe 


e 


ae Pee 7) 2 ee | 


The Automobile Responsibility Act 


Comes into Effect on June Ist. 


me aE Oe a ON A TT 


a 


~ 


a 


ny you have an accident for which you 
responsih| any desree, and as a result judgment is 


ir license to drive will be suspended 


until] such e juderment is satisfied and evidence is 
furnished of your alsility to assume the payment of future 
damages tha ht he impose d upon you, 


Every responsible automobile owner will desire 
to purchase “insurance.” 


—— ee ee ee 


C. EF REIBER 


insurance 
een en ee a a i a 


a ee 


i i ee a a 
g 


Bie) 


cs 


— 


WEDDING 


Prominent among the attractive 
ring weddings was that solemnized 


sp 
by the Rev R. Paton at Scarboro 
United Church, Calgary on May 
{ Oth 19053, when Kathleen Dorothy 
| izghter of Mr. and Mrs W. O 
i nd, of Calgary, became the 
| Frank A. Farrow, son ol! 
i\r 1 Mrs. IT. A. Farrow, also of 


Light 


id ¥ 4, * \ ankle lenge 
re W atenta) , Wy white crepe ib He, 
& VVWJi¢ck! | iz ht with orange bl 
} ' t fashion and her bour } 
Sencar ate ers ’ ater ' | 
Yo ; eae | ticd to a of ‘T’al im TOsé | 


Se ei 


i ! er je 18 maid-of- honor, wearing | 
pat ey | poWder-blae erepe with hat to mate! 
ae | itching silver slippers Mi 
\ tl was bridesmaid and | 
taffeta with match 
) Little kdith Wayeott in frock 
f pale pink acted as flower-girl. | 
Lhe attendants each carried acoloniu 
I bouquet of sweet peas and roses 
I t I umel f hed | \dr Kenneth Underwood attended | 
body, Has ed to match }the groom and Messrs, Led Fearmar 
rH ‘ OL} MAN LAMP fand Donald Archibald were ushers. | 
1D FOVE CO,, Led, } During the whning of the regirl 
! . Vatario j Me Richd Seaborn, violinist played | 
ASK YOUR DEALER 1 | You Truly 
(iX-ko) 


| Promoter of Prohibition | 
Lectures in Didsbury 


Mr. Ben HH. Spenee, international 
promoter of prohibition, of Toronto 
spoke in the Mennonite Church on 
Friday evening in the interests of 
the Alberta Prohibition Association. 
All the churches united in support- 
ing the meeting 

Two of the most significant state- 
ments made by Mr. Spence were: 
“That no liquor is sold in Canada 
which is not manufactured by use 
of private capital for private profit,’ 
and, regarding government contro] 
of liquor,’'Insofar as any liquor 
concern functioning as a selling sys- 
tem, it does not control the use of 
liquor.”’ 

Alberta was the first province to 
promote and obtain provincial pro- 
hibition, but also led the retreat in 
1923 Now it leads again in a 
renewed battle against the forces of 
liquor. The bili for provincial pro- 
hibition presented to parliament at 
its last sessiow and action on which 


was pastponed by referring to a4 
committee, oa investigation will 
again be presented at the next ses- 


sion, 
Open 
manufacture 


beer parlors, the 
and sale of spirits do 
not relievethe em ployment situation 
For every million dollars’ worth of 
liquor produced Ot persons are em- 
ployed and for every million dollars’ 
worth clothing and food manufactur: 
ed 208 people are employed. 


SuLOOHS 


In 1931 Alberta alone took in 
$11,000,000 from sale of liquor. 
$7,000,000 of which were taken in 


through the beer parlors 

A local committee was formed to 
work in conjunction with the Pro- 
vineial Prohibition Association 


———. 


CARD OF THANKS 


Wewish tothank our many friends 
and neighbors for their great kind- 
ness and help during the sickness 


mene PIONEER, DIDSBURY, ALTA. ~~ 


Ca Rae) ee eee 


Didsbury Dairy 


“LOCAL & GENERAL 


| 
| 
—_— -—- | 


Dr. Clarke went to Edmonton this 
week to attend a refresher clinic 


held at the University of Alberta. | AliIk and Cream Delivered 


There will be a service of Holy Daily 
Communion at St. Cyprian’s Chureh 
on Sunday morning at J1 o’clock 


Rev. A. D. Currie will officiate. 


Miss Marie Chambers left today | 
for the Innisfail Hospital, where she | 
will relieve during the summer 
months, 


E. V. Woodlock's softball team 
beat Ward Wyman’s team 21-2 at 
the local diamond Tuesday evening 
‘Jayvee’? Berscht acted ag umpire. 
Woody’? claims the umpire gave 
Wyman his two runs. 


Special orders receive 


prompt attention 


Milk from our own 


tested herd 


You may Whip our Cream, 


ron j ; 
The sacrament of the Lord’s Sup- BUT you can't Beat our Milk 


per will be observed at the morning 
service at Zion Hvangelical Church 
on Sunday and in the evening Mrs 
KF. A. Finlay will be the guest 
speaker. 


TOM MORRIS 


Phone 162 


Alberta a 
BOWDEN, ALTA. 


Riding like whirlwind! Fighting 
like a wildeat! Through a blazing 
hell! All for a girl—and gold! 
fom Mix in ‘Hidden Gold,’ at 
the Opera House next Monday and 
Thursday. Red hot adventure with 
fom and Tony! 


The Sylvan Lake season opened 
on the 24th and a number of Dids- 
bury people spent the holiday at 
that resort Among those at the 
Lake were Mr. and Mrs. Kendrick 
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Studer, 
Miss Winnie Studer, Mrs Mae 
Studer Campbell and Mr. and Mrs, 


Trees, 
Fruit and Perennials, 


New Special Prices on 
Shrubs, 


Buy Your Garden & Flower Seed 


W. G. Liesemer, From Us and Save Money. 
The first great hit of 1933— Seen 
**20,000 Years in Sing Sing’”’ written 


fe. Per Pkt, 
at Correspondingly Low Prices. 


by Warden Lewis Je. Lawes will be] 3 or 
the picture screened at the Opera 
tonight (lbursday) instead of “Lhe 
Old Dark House.’’ This is the story 
fa thousand men—and of their 
women who ean’t do without mea 
Show starts $8 30 


or by weight 


WRITE US FOR CATALOGUE 


RBEEROGCER SRR ee 


Word was received here of the 


and death of a dear wife and mother. | death last week of Mr. Wilfred Ads. YOU will be MORE THAN i 
We also thank our friends for the] head, brother of Mr. C, H. Adshead, SATISFIED by having your & 
many beautiful floral tributes. Mr Adshead, who was 34 years old Watch, Cloek, Phonograph, or @ 
Avard Orde and daughters. died at Calgary on Wednesday May Sewing Machine fixed right in @ 
Be 24(h and the funeral was held on ‘ vie ; - 
Go < 5 Didsbury. All my work is 8 
Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. C, H. Laeveres LR f , u 
NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND| Adshead, Mr. and Mrs, P. Lunt, guaranteed, Reasonable prices. I 
CLAIMANTS |Mr, F. Kaufman and Mr. Hd. Ford ae. Meo ak siherOhah ie) 
attended the funeral. Pee ne Pe Moe eee ORE Ei 
eect ; W | 
Taeainas PUBOBSLD DOLL,| English services will be held at m. GONTASH, Fs 
late of the Town of Didsbury, Farmer,| St. John’s Lutheran Church on Watchmaker & Jeweller. Fy 
leceas Sunday June 4th at 2 30 p m Phe BER RERARB MERAH. 
Notice is hereby given that all persons} topic of the sermon will be.’ [he 
vaving son the estate of the said Outpc ing o > Qrinit 
‘eat who disk onde aun dy s pone of a Bol atu Sein eee theca 
f December 1 are required to file ie the ‘lI a tt Lutheran Healt 
with the undersigned Administrator of | (here Wi ye {WO services nthe oo 
hie Kauate by the sehday of July 1088, 4| morning at t0 80 the service wilt [HG Portage La Prairie 
full statement duly verified, of their] be jn German ¢ Tnglish service 
claims aad any seeurities held by them, | . it 2 Niedarky bad in Big ish N38 AY | UT | T 4 J 
and that after that datethe Administrator | | ')E evening al / oW, e ‘ af 
Will distribute the assets of the deceased a ee 
smongthe partiesentitied thersto, having Is the Strongest Canadian 
regard only to the eciaims of which notice | Re , ao . \ 4 
has been so filed or brought to its know WEEKLY JOKE Mutual. Rates are Right. 
ledge ween SSS 
Dated this 27th day of May 1933. ete ee ae Insure your Property with 
PHE TRUSTS & GUARANTME Co Btd' || *aveie CAP RIME ANSE OR PROACnE . 
Pal hot nikteRER, a railroad crossing. Ile stopped | Fisher & Edwards, 
220, Eighth Avenue West, looked and listened very carefully | slow eat ear ee 
Calgary. All he heard was the ear behind!| AGENTS - DIDSBURY 
Il, A, HOWARD, Manager | bim crashing into his gas tank. Yess Sta ata 
a 
T alking Sean. at hen, 
The Royal Scot, here from 
Great Britain to haul the 
(lyer of the Londen, Midland 
& Scottish Railway on Can 
adian and United $8 
and Number 2§1 ft the Cana